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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (encephalopathy)
18,178 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have examined 9 healthy volunteers and 63 HIV-patients (16 asymptomatic patients and 47 patients with clinical AIDS-dementia complex, ADC) by magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and imaging (MRI) on a Siemens Magnetom SP63 (1.5 T). Proton MRS of the brain was performed at 63 MHz using the PRESS sequence (echo time = 135 ms, TR = 1.6 s). Four main results have been found: (1) HIV-related encephalopathy induces significant modifications of brain metabolism analyzed by MRS and the most sensitive metabolic parameter is the N-acetyl-aspartate/Choline ratio, (2) the correlation between MRS and MRI is good in 75% of patients, (3) in 4 of the 16 neuro-asymptomatic patients (i.e. 25%) a metabolic encephalopathy was found while MRI was still normal, and (4) MR spectra describe 3 different pathological metabolic patterns in the brain of HIV patients. Two patterns might correspond to the two entities of HIV-induced lesions i.e. HIV encephalitis and HIV-related progressive leukoencephalopathy.
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PMID:Localized brain proton MRS metabolic patterns in HIV-related encephalopathies. 788 65

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)-encephalopathy (formerly AIDS Dementia Complex, or ADC) is characterized by global impairment of intellectual and cognitive functions, personality and behavioral disturbances, decreased memory, inability to concentrate, and apathy. Its motor dysfunction is manifested by impaired speech, gait, and coordination, and by psychomotor retardation. Several scientific reports indicate that ADC may be the earliest, and, at times, the only evidence of human immunodeficiency virus infection, and may present a diagnostic challenge, particularly in the aviation context. Several aviation medicine specialists have pointed out the safety questions raised by this condition when it presents in otherwise asymptomatic individuals. Since October 1985, U.S. military pilots have been tested for the presence of HIV antibody and grounded if found positive. In May 1991, the Executive Council of the Aerospace Medical Association approved a position statement that supports testing of pilots for infection by HIV, and maintains that "individuals confirmed to be infected should be found medically disqualified for flying duties." While bureaucrats delay in resolving HIV mandatory screening, HIV-encephalopathy may be precipitously brought to light, with symptoms involving ocular motor disorders such as dissociated nystagmus, gaze-evoked nystagmus, and impaired saccadic function and smooth pursuit, frequent signs of HIV cerebellar and pontomesencephalic dysfunction.
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PMID:HIV-encephalopathy: should we await a catastrophe before screening? 783 42

Proton MRS has proved useful in the early diagnosis of HIV-related encephalopathy. The modifications of brain metabolism in HIV-related encephalopathy can be classified according to different metabolic patterns (Vion-Dury J et al. CR Acad Sci 1994;317:833-840). The present study describes the relative occurrence of these patterns and evaluates their evolution under zidovudine treatment. We have examined 112 HIV patients--35 neuroasymptomatic patients and 77 patients with ADC (AIDS dementia complex)--with localized proton MRS, using the PRESS 135-msec sequence. We have found the same metabolic modifications in N-acetylaspartate and choline-containing compounds as described in the literature. In addition, 14% of HIV patients with normal MRI displayed abnormal MRS, whatever their neurological status. The MRS-added diagnostic value in neuroasymptomatic patients reaches 30 %. The occurrence of undifferentiated (modification of NAA/Cho ratio only) and Cho (mainly an increase in choline signal) patterns is not significantly different in neuroasymptomatic and ADC patients. The NAA pattern (mainly a significant loss of NAA) is more frequent in ADC patients. Only ADC patients display the double pattern (with a significant increase in choline signal and a significant loss of NAA). Quantitated cerebral atrophy (bifrontal ratio) is related to the occurrence of NAA loss (in NAA and double patterns). An MRS follow-up study of 11 HIV patients showed that the clinical outcome was favorable after a 1000-mg/day zidovudine treatment in patients displaying an NAA pattern whereas this treatment had no effect on the patients displaying the Cho pattern. Consequently, MRS appears to be of great interest in predicting responsiveness to antiretroviral drugs and detecting early any resistance to treatment.
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PMID:Brain proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in HIV-related encephalopathy: identification of evolving metabolic patterns in relation to dementia and therapy. 926 93

Brain MR imaging techniques are important ancillary tests in the diagnosis of a suspected mitochondrial encephalopathy since they provide details on brain structural and metabolic abnormalities. This is particularly true in children where non-specific neurologic symptoms are common, biochemical findings can be marginal and genetic defects may be not discovered. MR imaging modalities include conventional, or structural, imaging (MRI) and functional, or ultrastructural, imaging (spectroscopy, MRS; diffusion, DWI-ADC; perfusion, DSCI--ASL). Among them MRI and MRS are the main tools for diagnosis and work up of MD, and this review will focus mainly on them. The MRI findings of MD are very heterogeneous, as they depend on the metabolic brain defects, age of the patient, stage and severity of the disease. No correlation has been found between genetic defects and neuroimaging picture; however, some relationships between MR findings and clinical phenotypes may be identified. Different combinations of MRI signal abnormalities are often encountered but the most common findings may be summarized into three main MR patterns: (i) non-specific; (ii) specific; (iii) leukodystrophic-like. Regarding the functional MR techniques, only proton MRS plays an important role in demonstrating an oxidative metabolism impairment in the brain since it can show the accumulation of lactate, present as a doublet peak at 1.33 ppm. Assessment of lactate should be always performed on brain tissue and on the ventricular cerebral spinal fluid. As for MRI, metabolic MRS abnormalities can be of different types, and two distinct patterns can be recognized: non-specific and specific. The specific metabolic profiles, although not frequent to find, are highly pathognomonic of MD. The un-specific metabolic profiles add value to structural images in allowing to define the lesion load and to monitor the response to therapy trials.
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PMID:Brain magnetic resonance in the diagnostic evaluation of mitochondrial encephalopathies. 1751 Jul 89

Methotrexate (MTX) is a major cause of treatment-related acute neurotoxicity. We report on clinical and imaging findings of reversibly restricted diffusion in a patient with transient encephalopathy after high dose MTX therapy for osteosarcoma. During the chemotherapy, a 19-year-old man was introduced for the evaluation of consciousness disturbance. Neurological examination revealed confusion, inability of speak at the onset On next day, there were still difficulties in swallowing and phonation, and furthermore deep tendon reflexes were hyperactive in bilateral lower limbs with positive Babinski responses bilaterally. By the 6th day, findings at neurological examination were completely normal. Initial imaging on presentation was performed using MRI. Diffusion weighted MRI clearly indicated areas of restricted diffusion within both centrum semiovale. These abnormalities were confirmed by the diffusion tensor (DT) technique (ADC and FA map). The follow-up MRI examinations using same protocol showed resolution of the ADC and FA abnormalities but increasing T2-signal changes. Neither contrast enhancement nor atrophy was encountered. Early detection of MTX white matter injury by DT image has the potential to alert the oncologist and neurologist to this event and provide a technique by which treatment of neurotoxicity can be monitored.
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PMID:[Case of methotrexate encephalopathy: findings on diffusion tensor image and correlation with clinical outcome]. 1751 Dec 73

Reversible focal lesions in the splenium of the corpus callosum (SCC) have recently been reported. They are circumscribed and located in the median aspect of the SCC. On MRI, they are hyperintense on T2-W and iso-hypointense on T1-W sequences, with no contrast enhancement. On DWI, SCC lesions are hyperintense with low ADC values, reflecting restricted diffusion due to cytotoxic edema. The common element is the disappearance of imaging abnormalities with time, including normalization of DWI. Clinical improvement is often reported. The most established and frequent causes of reversible focal lesions of the SCC are viral encephalitis, antiepileptic drug toxicity/withdrawal and hypoglycemic encephalopathy. Many other causes have been reported, including traumatic axonal injury. The similar clinical and imaging features suggest a common mechanism induced by different pathological events leading to the same results. Edema and diffusion restriction in focal reversible lesions of the SCC have been attributed to excitotoxic mechanisms that can result from different mechanisms; no unifying relationship has been found to explain all the pathologies associated with SCC lesions. In our opinion, the similar imaging, clinical and prognostic aspects of these lesions depend on a high vulnerability of the SCC to excitotoxic edema and are less dependent on the underlying pathology. In this review, the relevant literature concerning reversible focal lesions in the SCC is analyzed and hypotheses about their pathogenesis are proposed.
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PMID:Reversible focal splenial lesions. 1752 52

A 56-year-old woman attended our hospital because of acute severe (thunderclap) headache. Neurological examination was normal and no abnormality was found on head CT or by cerebrospinal fluid examination. A few days later, she experienced a recurrence and suffered a seizure in her left upper and lower extremities. On neurological examination, she had conjugate deviation of the eyes toward the right side and left lower limb paralysis with Chaddock sign. MRI showed multiple hyperintense lesions in the bilateral occipital and parietal lobes, predominantly in the subcortical white matter at the right side on T2-weighted and FLAIR images. We diagnosed posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) because the ADC map showed a vasogenic edema pattern (increased ADC values in the hypodense lesions on diffusion-weighted image). Her blood pressure was normal and there were no underling diseases. As MRA showed vasoconstriction especially in bilateral posterior cerebral arteries, we initiated a therapy with a Ca-channel blocker. On follow-up MRI, the hyperintense lesions on T2-weighted and FLAIR images had almost disappeared, and vasoconstriction was also improved on MRA. This case suggested that cerebral vasoconstriction could underlie both thunderclap headache and PRES.
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PMID:[Case of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome with cerebral vasoconstriction]. 1854 Mar 85

The central tegmental tract (CTT) is mainly the extrapyramidal tract connecting between the red nucleus and the inferior olivary nucleus. There are only a few case reports describing CTT abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in children. Our purpose was to evaluate the frequency of CTT lesions and their characteristics on MRI, and to correlate the MR imaging findings with clinical features. We reviewed retrospectively the MR images of 392 children (215 boys and 177 girls) ranging in age from 1 to 6 years. To evaluate symmetrical CTT hyperintense lesions, we defined a CTT lesion as an area of bilateral symmetrical hyperintensity in the tegmentum pontis on both T2-weighted images and diffusion-weighted images in more than two slices. We measured the ADC (apparent diffusion coefficient) values of symmetrical CTT hyperintensity, and compared them with those of children without CTT abnormality. CTT lesions were detected in 20 (5.1%) of the 392 children. The mean ADC value for these 20 children was significantly lower than that of the normal CTT (p<0.001). On MR imaging, other than CTT lesions, associated parenchymal lesion included: none (n=6); other abnormalities, including periventricular leukomalacia (n=3); thin corpus callosum (n=3); ventricular dilatation (n=2); encephalopathy (n=2). Clinically, cerebral palsy was the most frequent clinical diagnosis (n=6), accounting for 30%, which was significantly more frequent than the prevalence of cerebral palsy among children without CTT lesions (13%) (n<0.05). CTT lesions were detected in 5.1% of all the children examined. Cerebral palsy was the most frequent clinical diagnosis.
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PMID:Symmetrical central tegmental tract (CTT) hyperintense lesions on magnetic resonance imaging in children. 1879 97

Vasculitides are characterized by inflammation and necrosis of the blood vessel wall. Large vessels including the aorta are affected in giant-cell arteritis, medium-size arteries in classic polyarteritis nodosa. The small-vessel vasculitides are separated in those with antineutrophil cytoplasm antibodies (ANCA) and those without. The primary angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS) is a rare disorder affecting both medium- and small-sized vessels. Major symptoms of cerebral vasculitis are stroke, headache and encephalopathy. Diagnosis is based on laboratory and imaging findings. When cerebral affection occurs in systemic vasculitis an acute inflammatory response with raised erythrocyte sedimentation rate and increased values of C-reactive protein is present. In many cerebral vasculitides including PACNS, CSF studies reveal inflammatory findings. Magnetic resonance imaging, including ADC maps, diffusion and gradient echo sequences, is the investigation of choice to detect and monitor cerebral involvement. Certain MRI techniques and 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography allow the visualization of vessel wall inflammation when the lumen is still unaffected on angiography. The treatment recommendations for cerebral angitis are derived from protocols for systemic vasculitides. In general, a combination of steroids and pulse cyclophosphamide (CYC) is recommended for induction treatment. An alternative option is the use of the anti- CD20 antibody rituximab. Methotrexate, azathioprine and mycophenolate mofetil are recommended as alternatives to CYC once remission is achieved.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of cerebral vasculitis. 2118 Jun 34

Central nervous system involvement is an uncommon though potentially a severe complication during influenza infection; the pathogenic mechanisms of the neurological syndromes described in humans are largely unknown. We describe a case of a 51-year-old man who presented with fever and behavioral changes but no focal neurological deficits. The next day, the condition rapidly evolved into a severe neurological syndrome with recurrent focal motor seizures with secondary generalization. At the brain MRI, FLAIR disclosed a slight area of increased signal in the left mesial frontal cortex extending to the frontopolar area and insula. At DWI, a mild hyperintensity was evident in the mesial-frontopolar cortex, with normal ADC values. MR perfusion was indicative of severe hypoperfusion. Fungal, bacterial and viral cultures in CSF, blood and urine were negative. The nasopharyngeal swab PCR was positive for the H1N1-influenza A virus. The patient was thus treated and by day five the neurological examination results had returned to normal. A follow-up MRI, performed two weeks later, only revealed a residual slight hyperintensity in the left medial frontal cortex. The onset of a rapidly evolving encephalopathy syndrome, its close association with a MRI brain pattern of acute vasogenic edema and favorable outcome support a diagnosis of PRES during influenza A infection. However, the topographic characteristics of the cerebral lesion seem to define a PRES with an atypical pattern.
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PMID:Unusual posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome in a case of influenza A/H1N1 infection. 2291 Jan 47


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